Eastbourne, East Sussex
Mezzanine finance sits behind senior debt in the capital stack, stretching your total borrowing to 80-90% of costs. It reduces the equity you need to inject, freeing capital for additional projects.
Eastbourne, East Sussex
Mezzanine finance fills the gap between senior debt and developer equity in the capital stack. For schemes where the senior lender will fund 60-65% of costs, mezzanine can stretch total leverage to 85-90%, dramatically reducing the equity you need to inject. This capital efficiency lets you pursue multiple projects simultaneously.
The intercreditor relationship between senior and mezzanine lenders is the critical structural element. Not all senior lenders will accept mezzanine behind their facility, and those that do typically require an approved intercreditor agreement that governs priorities in a default scenario. We work with both parties to ensure the capital stack is structurally sound.
Mezzanine pricing reflects its subordinated position - typically 12-18% per annum - but the overall blended cost of your capital stack is often lower than alternative structures that achieve similar leverage. The key calculation is whether the additional leverage creates sufficient incremental return to justify the cost.
Planning in this region can be complex, with conservation areas, Green Belt restrictions, and robust local opposition adding time and cost to consenting. However, high exit values mean that lenders are often willing to offer favourable terms for well-located sites with deliverable planning. The Build-to-Rent sector is particularly active, with institutional capital increasingly targeting outer London and key South East commuter hubs.
Mezzanine finance is a powerful tool for property developers in Eastbourne who want to maximise their capital efficiency. By stretching total leverage from the senior lender's cap of 60-70% to 85-90% of total development costs, mezzanine dramatically reduces the equity you need to inject into each project. This freed capital can be deployed into additional schemes, effectively multiplying your development capacity across East Sussex and beyond.
We coordinate the entire mezzanine process, from identifying mezzanine-friendly senior lenders through to negotiating the intercreditor agreement that governs the relationship between both tranches. This coordination is essential because the mezzanine facility must be structured in harmony with the senior debt, not bolted on as an afterthought. Our experience in structuring layered capital stacks means we can identify and resolve potential structural issues before they delay your project.
Mezzanine finance is a specialist product that sits between senior debt and developer equity in the capital stack. Structuring it correctly requires a broker who understands intercreditor dynamics, can coordinate with your senior lender, and has access to mezzanine providers who are actively deploying capital. We arrange mezzanine facilities from debt funds, family offices, and specialist lenders with genuine appetite for East Sussex developments.
The mezzanine market is less transparent than senior development finance. There is no comparison website, limited published rate information, and each provider has specific criteria around minimum deal size, geographic focus, and acceptable senior lender partners. As specialist brokers, we have established relationships with mezzanine providers who can move quickly and are comfortable lending in Eastbourne and the wider East Sussex area.
Getting the capital stack right from the outset is critical. The wrong mezzanine structure can create cash flow problems, governance friction, or exit complications that cost you more than the additional leverage is worth. Submit your project and our team will model the optimal capital structure for your development.
We source several types of mezzanine capital across East Sussex: traditional second-charge mezzanine that layers behind your senior development finance facility, stretched senior products where a single lender provides both tranches (eliminating intercreditor complexity), profit-share mezzanine where the provider takes a percentage of development profit instead of fixed interest, and preferred equity structures that sit between debt and true equity in the waterfall.
Each structure has different implications for your project governance, cost profile, and exit mechanics. Second-charge mezzanine typically costs 12-18% per annum but preserves your control. Profit-share structures reduce your cash costs during the build phase but can be more expensive if the scheme performs well. Stretched senior products simplify the legal structure but may carry a premium over a two-lender arrangement. We advise on the optimal approach for each Eastbourne development based on its specific economics.
For larger schemes, we also arrange equity and joint venture capital as an alternative to, or alongside, mezzanine debt. The right choice depends on your equity position, return expectations, and appetite for sharing control of the development process.
Mezzanine interest rates typically range from 12% to 18% per annum, with interest usually rolled up rather than serviced monthly. Arrangement fees are 2-3% of the mezzanine facility. While these costs are higher than senior development debt, the mezzanine is funding a smaller portion of the capital stack, and the blended cost of senior plus mezzanine is often comparable to alternative structures that achieve similar leverage.
The key calculation is whether the additional leverage creates sufficient incremental return to justify the cost. If senior debt funds 65% of costs and mezzanine stretches this to 85%, you are using 20% more debt to free up 20% of equity. That freed equity can be deployed into another project, effectively doubling your development capacity. For developers in Eastbourne with pipeline opportunities, this capital efficiency can be transformational.
We model the full capital stack for every mezzanine enquiry, showing you the blended cost of finance, the impact on scheme profit, and the comparison with alternative structures (higher equity contribution, stretched senior, or JV equity). This analysis ensures you make an informed decision based on your project's specific numbers.
Mezzanine lenders assess your scheme through a similar lens to senior lenders but with additional focus on the developer's experience and the profit margin in the deal. Most providers require a minimum net development profit of 18-20% on cost after all finance charges, giving them comfort that the scheme can absorb cost overruns or market adjustments without threatening their position. A strong track record of delivering comparable schemes is important for securing the best mezzanine terms.
The senior lender must be mezzanine-friendly. Not all development finance lenders accept subordinated debt behind their facility, and those that do typically require an approved intercreditor agreement. We identify mezzanine-friendly senior lenders at the outset of the process, avoiding the costly scenario of agreeing senior terms only to discover the lender will not accept mezzanine.
Minimum mezzanine facility sizes are typically £200,000-£500,000, with some providers requiring larger minimum investments. For smaller schemes where mezzanine is not available, alternative approaches include stretched senior products, bridging finance for the gap, or restructuring the deal to work with a higher equity contribution.
Planning pipeline
| Ref | Proposal | Units | Est. GDV | Status | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LW/26/0101 | Variation of Condition 3 (Landscaping Scheme) in relation to approval LW/25/0069… Church Farm , Church Lane, Chailey Green, East Sussex, Bn8 4Da | - | - | Pending | 23/04/2026 |
| LW/26/0098 | Approval of Reserved Matters application for appearance and scale relating to Ou… Land East Of Tillershaw, North Common Road, Wivelsfield Green, East Sussex, , | 4 | £1.8M | Pending | 21/04/2026 |
| LW/26/0092 | Demolition and reconstruction of double detached garage onto new foundations 20 Bannings Vale, Saltdean, East Sussex, , | - | - | Pending | 20/04/2026 |
| LW/26/0090 | Temporary use of land under Permitted Development for up to 28 days a year Land South Of, Ringmer Road, Newhaven, East Sussex, , | - | - | Pending | 16/04/2026 |
| LW/26/0078 | Prior Notification under The Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Develo… 58 Central Avenue, Telscombe Cliffs, East Sussex, Bn10 7Nb, | - | - | Pending | 31/03/2026 |
| Ref | Proposal | Units | Est. GDV | Status | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LW/907/CM | Erection of a single storey , ZappShelter, for parts and equipment storage to t… Newhaven Energy Recovery Facility, North Quay Road, Newhaven, East Sussex, , | - | - | Pending | 08/04/2026 |
| LW/26/0191 | Scoping Opinion under Regulation 15 of the Town and Country Planning (Environmen… Street Record, Highbridge Lane, East Chiltington, East Sussex, , | - | - | Pending | 02/04/2026 |
| LW/26/0189 | Outline application with all matters reserved except for access, for the erectio… Land East Of, Ditchling Road, Wivelsfield, East Sussex, , | 62 | £18.3M | Pending | 01/04/2026 |
| LW/26/0174 | Replacement of existing glazing throughout the Obermer building Chailey Heritage School, Haywards Heath Road, North Chailey, East Sussex, Bn8 4Ef, | - | - | Pending | 01/04/2026 |
| LW/26/0175 | Demolition of existing bungalow and erection of 5no. residential dwellings with … Camelia Cottage , Station Road, North Chailey, East Sussex, Bn8 4Pj | - | - | Pending | 01/04/2026 |
Deal intelligence
Financial analysis of the largest approved planning applications in Eastbourne, East Sussex. These 2 schemes represent £20.1M in combined GDV across 66 units, with indicative capital stacks for each.
£18.3M
Estimated GDV
Units
62
GDV / Unit
£295k
Est. Build Cost
£8.2M
Est. Profit on GDV
47.0%
Broker insight: A scheme of this scale would typically attract competitive senior development finance at 60-65% LTGDV with mezzanine stretching to 85% LTGDV. Phased drawdowns reduce interest costs. Consider development exit finance to manage sales at your pace.
£1.8M
Estimated GDV
Units
4
GDV / Unit
£450k
Est. Build Cost
£810k
Est. Profit on GDV
47.0%
Broker insight: For a 4-unit scheme in Eastbourne, we would typically structure senior debt at 60-65% LTGDV with mezzanine available to reduce equity to as little as 10%. Run an appraisal to model your returns.
Indicative terms
Typical pricing for mezzanine finance in Eastbourne. Actual terms depend on GDV, leverage, location and your experience — the numbers below are where most structured deals land.
Interest Rate
From 12% p.a.
Loan to Value
Up to 85-90% LTGDV
Typical Term
12-24 months
Arrangement Fee
2-3% of facility
Indicative only, subject to individual assessment. Actual terms issued against a completed Deal Room submission.
Representative deal
A 24-unit commercial-to-residential conversion requiring a stretched capital stack. Senior debt covered 65% of total costs, with mezzanine bridging the gap to 85%. The dual-tranche structure was coordinated with a single monitoring surveyor and governed by an intercreditor agreement negotiated in parallel with the senior facility.
GDV
£5,800,000
Loan Amount
£1,200,000
LTV
85% of Total Costs
Loan Type
Mezzanine (behind £3.5M senior)
Representative only. Actual terms vary based on scheme specifics and are issued after underwriting.
Common questions
Further reading
Both fill the gap between senior debt and your own cash, but the cost structures and control implications are worlds apart. Here is how to decide.
High street banks offer the cheapest rates. Specialist lenders offer speed and flexibility. Here is how to decide which route is right for your development.
Senior debt and mezzanine finance are different layers of the same capital stack. Understanding how they interact is essential for structuring any development deal.
Ready when you are
Submit your Mezzanine Finance enquiry in Eastbourne and a partner will come back with an initial structure and indicative terms within one working day. No forms-for-forms’-sake — a short note on the scheme is enough.
Where we fund
Adjacent products
From 6.5% p.a. · Up to 65-70% LTGDV
From 0.55% p.m. · Up to 75% LTV
Profit share from 40% · Up to 100% of costs
From 0.65% p.m. · Up to 75% LTV
From 5.5% p.a. · Up to 75% LTV
From 0.55% p.m. · Up to 75% LTV